Synopsis: A bounty hunter named Dr. King Schultz (Waltz) tracks down a frees a slave named Django (Foxx) to help him hunt down the Brittle Brothers. Once that's done, Schultz agrees to make Django his full-time partner and to help him free his wife from the clutches of the evil plantation owner, Calvin Candie (DiCaprio).

The film is about a slave
named Django who is bought by a bounty hunter named Dr. King Schultz, who needs
Django to help track down a few bounties. After finding that Django is quite
good at bounty hunting, Schultz agrees to free Django, make him his full
partner and help track down Django’s wife, Broomhilda, who has been sold to an
evil plantation owner named Calvin Candie, played by DiCaprio.

It’s been making a bit of
waves because of it’s liberal use of the N-word, because of Tarantino’s
revisionist take on American slavery, and because of Tarantino’s
classic stylized violence. That said, we’ve been looking forward to this film
for quite some time and now that we’ve seen it, what did you think, Sarah?

Sarah:
Well just from what I’ve seen of Tarantino’s filmography, which is pretty much
just the two Kill Bill films and the first half of Reservoir Dogs, it seems
like this one is pretty on par with the way he likes to do filmmaking. He seems
to like his cameos in his own movies, doesn’t he?

But I really liked this movie!
I LOVED Christoph Waltz. I’ve only ever seen him in Water for Elephants, which
didn’t impress me, but I really liked him here.

Christoph Waltz (left), who won an Oscar for his role as Hans Landa in Tarantino's Inglourious Basterds, scores another fantastic role as the bounty hunter Dr. King Schultz. Might another Oscar be in his future?

Rating: R for strong violence including brutal disturbing images, and for language

Run Time: 2 hours, 37 minutes

Synopsis: Maya (Chastain) is a fresh agent in the CIA assigned to the task force in Pakistan charged with finding Osama bin Laden. Through various means and over many years, Maya must find and cultivate leads, all while fighting her higher ups, world politics and the loss of co-workers to the war on terror.

REVIEW

Andrew:
Hello readers! Sarah and I visited New York City for Christmas Eve, and while
we were there we took the opportunity to find a showing of Kathryn Bigelow’s
latest film – Zero Dark Thirty, an in-depth look at the ten year manhunt for
Osama bin Laden following the attacks on September 11, 2011.

It’s Bigelow’s first
directorial effort since 2008’s The Hurt Locker, which won the Best
Picture Oscar and earned Bigelow the Oscar for Best Director, a first for a
female director.

This is one we’ve been
looking forward to for some time now. The subject matter is obviously pretty
interesting and I was personally curious to see how Bigelow’s follow-up to The
Hurt Locker would be. So now that we’ve seen Zero Dark Thirty, what
did you think of it, Sarah?

Kyle Chandler (left) plays the CIA's Islamabad Station Chief, and Jason Clarke plays Dan, a CIA operativewhose specialty is getting information out of their detainees.

Synopsis: A film adaptation of the popular Broadway musical, based on Victor Hugo's novel of the same name, about ex-con and parolee fugitive Jean Valjean (Jackman) and his attempt to live a straight life raising an orphaned girl (Seyfried) while evading the tenacious Inspector Javert (Crow), with a conclusion set during the June Revolution in 1832 France.

REVIEW

Sarah: Hello readers! Yesterday Andrew and I
joined the merry Christmas Day masses at the movie theatre to see one of the
holiday’s most anticipated releases – Les Misérables,
starring Hugh Jackman, Eddie Redmayne, Amanda Seyfriend, Anne Hathaway, Russell
Crowe and a whole host of other characters to put on this French revolution
musical. Les Mis is a
film adaptation of the popular stage musical that has been running for 27 years
now and is just an amazing show. It’s one of my favorites, and if you’ve never
seen it on stage and get the chance, it’s one that you shouldn’t pass up on.

Anyway, Les Mis is directed by Tom
Hooper, who won the Oscar for Best Director two years ago for The King’s
Speech, which also won the Oscar for Best Picture, and Hooper’s new film
has also been getting plenty of award season buzz. So Andrew, now that we’ve
seen Les Misérables, what did you think?

Andrew: Well I’ve never seen any
version of Les Mis before. I’ve never seen it on stage, I’ve
never seen the Liam Neeson film version from the late nineties, nothing. I
haven’t even read the book. So all I knew about the movie was from what you’ve
told me about the play. I knew the basic idea and some of the characters, like
Jean Valjean being an ex-convict, Inspector Javert tracking him down, Valjean’s
relationship with Fantine and Cosette, etc.

Seriously, the extent of Andrew's Les Misérables knowledge pretty much startedand ends with knowing Amanda Seyfried plays the older version of Cosette,the little girl in the poster above.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Andrew: Hello readers! We’re
back from our vacation, and while being away from the blog for a week or so has
left us with less fresh content than we would have liked, we promise we’ll be
hitting hard during this week. Plenty of reviews will be coming as we see the
big name, Oscar worthy releases that late December brings, but we’re starting
it all of today with a new Six Pack Of… just in time for Christmas!

Christmas is Sarah’s
favorite holiday, and one of her absolute favorite things to do is watch Christmas
movies. And naturally, with this being a movie blog, it just makes sense for us
to bring you a Six Pack Of… Our Favorite Christmas Movies! We’ll each chat
about our three favorite holiday films, taking turns in descending order,
starting with…

6.) Gremlins
(Andrew’s #3 Fav Christmas Movie)

A: I know some people will
say, “That’s not a Christmas movie!” And I know it’s a bit unorthodox, but hear
me out. First and foremost, the entire film is set during Christmas time. Billy
(Zach Galligan) is even given the cute-as-hell Mogwai named Gizmo as a
Christmas gift from his father. But I’ll never forget the following things
after watching this movie the first time as a kid: Being alternately horrified
and saddened by Phoebe Cates’ Kate telling Billy the story of how her father
died while pretending to be Santa Claus; how cute and awesome Gizmo is
(seriously, I’ve always wanted a Mogwai); the Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs
scene; and the finale in the retail store where Stripe melts away like the
Nazis in Raiders of the Lost Ark. The movie’s a classic to begin with,
the fact it takes place during Christmas qualifies it as a classic Christmas
movie in my book.

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Andrew: Hello readers! Yesterday saw the release of the first entry in Peter Jackson's new Hobbit trilogy, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey. You can read our review of that right HERE, wherein we mention that prior to us seeing the film, Sarah and I had been guests on the As You WatchPodcast, and the main topic of conversation was The Hobbit and Jackson's original The Lord of the Rings trilogy. And that podcast episode has now been posted online!We were honored to be the first guests to be on for a second time, and we had an absolute blast talking about these films with our friends Nick of The Cinematic Katzenjammer, Joe from Two Dude Review, and Vern from Vern's Video Vangaurd. So thank you, gentlemen, for having us back as guests. Now, readers, if you'd like to listen to the podcast, read on as we'll break down the different segments of the show after the jump!

Synopsis:
An unadventurous hobbit named Bilbo Baggins (Freeman) is sucked into taking
part in a mission by Gandalf the Grey (McKellen), to help the dwarf prince
Thorin Oakenshield (Armtiage) and his company of dwarves march to their former home
in the Lonely Mountain and take it back from an evil dragon.

REVIEW

(Editor's Note: This is our longest review to date. If you're not familiar with our review style, the following is a transcription of our actual conversation about the movie immediately after we saw it. Fair warning - we talked for 40 minutes. Normally we go no longer than 20. Enjoy the review!)

Andrew:
Hello readers! Last night Sarah and I were fortunate enough to catch an advance
screening of Peter Jackson’s highly anticipated return to Middle Earth, TheHobbit: An Unexpected Journey. It is the first part of Jackson’s new
film adaptation trilogy of J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit,” Sarah’s all-time
favorite book.

Now, this isn’t one that
we’ve had a chance to really delve into and preview on our site yet, though we
have talked about it in some columns prior to this, and we recently recorded an
episode of the As You Watch podcasts as guests again, talking exclusively
about The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings trilogy. That
will be coming out sometime next week.

But we’re going to talk
about this in a full review right here, and I get the feeling that this is
going to be a bit of a lengthy one. So Sarah, like I just said, this is your
favorite book, bar none, and we’ve had some hesitations and some excitement
heading in. Now that we’ve seen it, what did you think of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey?

Sarah:
I actually want to know what you thought of it first.

A:
Really?

S:
Yup.

A:
Alright. I would say that…hmm…I guess in sort of a general sense, it’s a good
movie but it’s not a great movie, and it certainly does not compare to The
Lord of the Rings. Now, this is partially because the source material
is more of a children’s book. It’s a 300 page book…

S:
Not even.

A:
It’s a quick read. And so a lot of the material for this film was also a bit
light-hearted. This particular film is definitely more of a set-up of things
that are going to come in the next two films, but they try and shoehorn in some
action pieces. Some of those worked for me, some of them didn’t.

The acting performances
throughout aren’t amazing, but they’re not bad either. I thought Martin Freeman
(BBC’s Sherlock) did a really good job as Bilbo Baggins, especially
later on in the film, I really think he hits his stride with the riddle scene
with Gollum and thereafter.

But I wouldn’t say I
loved this movie, by any stretch of the imagination. And we’ll get to this
later, but we saw this film in the new HFR format…

S:
We saw this in the format that Peter Jackson intended it to be seen in.

Martin Freeman (center) stars as Bilbo Baggins in The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, previously portrayed by Ian Holm in Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings trilogy

A:
Exactly. And they’re calling it High Frame Rate, which is fine. It was filmed
and projected at 48 frames per second as opposed to the traditional 24 frames
per second. But we’ll dive into that more later, but I’ll say this real quick –
I didn’t like it at all. I hated it, to be more precise. But we’ll get to that
later. Now…what did you think of the
film?

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Andrew: Hello readers, I'm back with our second big trailer of the day, and this one is for next summer's big Johnny Depp action-adventure film, The Lone Ranger. After what seemed like years of development hell, and skyrocketing production costs while they filmed it, we finally received a teaser trailer a couple months ago showing Armie Hammer (The Social Network) in the title role and Depp as his famous sidekick, Tonto. Check it out and I'll chat about my quick takes on it after the jump:

Andrew: Hello readers! Today is a good day for trailers. We'll be posting another here shortly to share with you, but this first one takes a little more precedence because of its sheer epicness.If you saw The Dark Knight Rises in theatres, you probably saw one of two versions of a teaser trailer for next summer's new Superman film, Man of Steel. Today, Warner Bros. has released the first full-length trailer, and if this doesn't have Christopher Nolan's fingerprints all over it, I don't know what does. Check it out after the jump and we'll talk about it after you watch it:

Andrew: Hello readers! Some of you might know this and others may not, but every week Sarah and I are called in for jury duty. I mean...well, not as in we actually go down to a courthouse and listen to a prosecuting and defense attorney argue over someone's crime. We don't do that every week. Could you imagine if we did? Yikes.No, what I mean is that every week Sarah and I are called in by our buddy, Nick, over at The Cinematic Katzenjammer to partake as members of his 12-panel jury for his DVD Court column. Each week sees the release of a new batch of movies on DVD and Blu-ray, and each week we, along with 11 other movie blogs, give our personal rulings on whether you, dear readers, should Buy, Rent, Skip or Burn the new films that have come out for your home viewing pleasure. It's a simple exercise and one we love being a part of. So every week we'll be posting a link to Nick's site with its swanky new design so you can see what we and our fellow jurors have decreed.This week's new releases on DVD and Blu-ray: Seth McFarlane's Ted,Ice Age 4: Continental Drift, and The Bourne Legacy.Click HERE to enter the courtroom at The Cinematic Katzenjammer!

Friday, December 7, 2012

Directed By: David O. Russell (The Fighter) Starring: Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence, Robert De Niro, Jackie WeaverRating: R for language and some sexuality/nudityRun Time: 2 hours, 2 minutesSynopsis: Pat (Cooper) is released from his psychiatric hospital into the care of his parents (De Niro & Weaver), 8 months after beating up his wife's lover. In an attempt to get back together with his wife, Pat tries to become a better person by reading classic books, working out and agreeing to help a new friend, the recently widowed Tiffany (Lawrence), compete in a dance contest.REVIEWAndrew: Hello readers! Earlier this week Sarah and I took a
day trip down to New York City to take in some delicious food from some of our
favorite food trucks (shout out to Wafles & Dinges [@waffletruck] and
Trusty Truck [@trustytruck]!) and to catch a showing of David O. Russell’s
latest directorial effort, Silver Linings Playbook! Starring
Bradley Cooper, Jennifer Lawrence and Robert De Niro, it’s based on the Matthew
Quick’s 2008 novel “The Silver Linings Playbook”.

Cooper (The Hangover) plays Pat, a Philadelphia schoolteacher who is
brought home by his parents from the psychiatric hospital 8 months after he
found his wife cheating on him and had a psychotic breakdown, which included
him beating the crap out of his wife’s lover. De Niro (Meet the Parents) plays Pat’s dad, Pat,
Sr., who suffers from OCD and who, after having recently retired, has become a bookie to raise
money so he can open his own restaurant. And Jennifer Lawrence (The Hunger Games) plays Tiffany,
sister-in-law to Pat’s best friend and a recent widow, who is also a little
crazy and takes a shine to Pat. Basically everyone in this film is just a
little bit crazy.

Sarah: Yeah…and there are a lot of other recognizable faces
in the movie, like Julia Stiles (The Bourne Ultimatum) and Chris Tucker (Rush Hour).

A: This is a movie that we've wanted to see for quite some
time. We've been hearing a lot of great things about the performances from
Cooper, Lawrence and De Niro, but because it’s only in limited release so far
we had to go to Manhattan to see it. Now that we HAVE seen Silver Linings
Playbook, what did you think of it?

S: I liked it, but I believe that the strength of the movie
lies solely in its cast.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Andrew: Hello readers! Sorry that we've been a little slow in the content department recently. Now that college basketball is in full swing I'm a little busier at the day-job, and Sarah's picking up more hours at hers, but a lot of them are at night, so our movie schedule is a little screwy. But we're coming with two posts today and the first one we're INCREDIBLY excited for...The "first-look" trailer for Star Trek Into Darkness, the sequel to J.J. Abrams' massive 2009 Star Trek reboot! Check it out below, and then I'll hit you up real quick with what Sarah and I thought of it:

Ok, so first thoughts when we first watched that? "Damn that looks dark and awesome!" Second thought? "Benedict Cumberbatch looks like he's going to be amazing as...Khan?" He has to be Khan, right? He's clearly out for revenge on Kirk, there's a shot of him sitting in the captain's chair on the Enterprise, and.....well, there's not much else to go on other than hearsay.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Directed By: Andrew Dominik (The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford) Starring: Brad Pitt, Scoot McNairy, Richard Jenkins, Ray Liotta, James GandolfiniRating: R for violence, sexual references, pervasive language and some drug useRun Time: 1 hour, 37 minutesSynopsis: Set during the economic crisis of 2008, when a mob-protected card game is robbed by some low-level crooks, the mob hires hit man Jackie Cogan (Pitt) to take care of the crooks.REVIEW Andrew: Hello readers! This
past weekend Sarah and I ventured to a town just south of ours to see a morning
screening of the new Brad Pitt vehicle, Killing Them Softly, an adaptation
of the novel “Cogan’s Trade” by George V. Higgins.

This was one that has been
on our radar not just because of its trailer, but we wrote a post way back when
the first pictures were released for it because the premise caught our
attention and it looked awesome.

Sarah: Yeah, when the first
pictures came out, which was a long time ago, we were really intrigued by the
thought of Brad Pitt playing a hit man for the mob.

A:Killing Them Softly stars
Pitt as a hit man named Jackie Cogan, who is hired by the Mafia to dispose of a few
low-level criminals who robbed a Mob-protected card game. Ray Liotta (Goodfellas)
plays Markie Trattman, the mobster whose game is knocked over; Richard Jenkins
(The
Cabin in the Woods) plays the mob’s lawyer who hires Cogan; James
Gandolfini (Zero Dark Thirty) plays Mickey, another hit man who Cogan brings
in to the job; and Scoot McNairy (Argo) and Ben Mendelsohn (The
Dark Knight Rises) play Frankie and Russell, the thugs who rob Markie’s
game.

Again, this was one that had
been on our radar, but now that we've seen it, what did you think of Killing
Them Softly?

Ben Mendelsohn (left) and Scoot McNairy play a couple of low-level criminals named Russell and Frankie who are hired to rob a mob-protected card game. For the first 30 minutes of the movie they're the main focus, for good and bad.

Synopsis: When Pi Patel (Sharma) and his family travel by freighter across the Pacific to move their zoo animals to Canada, a large storm sinks their ship, leaving Pi as the only human survivor. Stranded at sea for almost a year and only a dangerous Bengal tiger as his companion, Pi battles with the faith he lost as a child while struggling with the elements to stay alive.

REVIEW

Andrew: Hello readers! Earlier this week Sarah and I caught a matinee
showing of the new film
adaptation of Yann Martel's immensely
popular 2001 novel, LifeofPi,
directed by Academy Award winner Ang Lee. Told through flashbacks, the film is
about the survival of an
Indian teenager named Pi (short for
Piscine, named after a French swimming pool, natch) who gets
stranded on a lifeboat in the Pacific Ocean after the cargo freighter his
family’s zoo was being transported on sinks, with his only company for 227 days
out on the sea is a Bengal tiger named Richard Parker.

This was a film whose
trailer we've seen numerous times; it’s one that I don’t think either one of us was necessarily excited about
seeing, though I did want to see it because it was shot in 3D, not
post-converted. Ang Lee has said numerous times that he didn't think “Life of
Pi” was a filmable book until he decided to give it a shot in 3D.

So that’s why I wanted
to see it, but I know you weren’t too particularly jazzed about seeing this
one. Now that we've seen it, what did you think of LifeofPi?

Sarah: I’m still a wondering a little bit what all the fuss was about.
Don’t get me wrong, it’s a beautiful movie. It’s beautiful. But like Avatar, most
of the movie’s stock seems to ride on the special effects and the 3D. I wasn’t
blown away. I thought that the story was…not weak…I just never read the book,
it never appealed to me, and it still doesn’t appeal to me. It’s not like I
want to rush home and read the book now.

I don’t know. It was
pretty, but that’s about all I can say about how I truly feel about Life
of Pi. Sorry, but it’s true.

Life of Pi, based on the novel of the same name, largely takes place on or around a lifeboat adrift in the Pacific where Pi Patel must survive the elements and a tiger named Richard Parker.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

Rating:
PG-13 for sequences of intense war violence and action, and for language

Run Time: 1 hour, 54 minutes

Synopsis: U.S. Marine Jed Eckert (Hemsworth) is home on leave, visiting his
father and younger brother, Matt (Peck), when North Korean soldiers suddenly invade
their hometown. Jed and Matt flee to the woods, form a rebellion with a group
of friends they saved, call themselves Wolverines after their high school
mascot, and attempt to save their town. A remake of the 1984 original.

REVIEW

Andrew:
Hello readers! The other night Sarah and I joined the crowds looking to see a
movie the night before Thanksgiving, where we joined a relatively full crowd in
seeing the new Red Dawn remake starring Chris Hemsworth, Josh Peck and Josh
Hutcherson. Red Dawn, much like The Cabin in the Woods, was
originally filmed in 2009 starring a pre-Thor Hemsworth, but shelved thanks to
MGM’s bankruptcy problems and is just now getting released in 2012.

Sarah, you haven’t seen the
original 1984 version starring Patrick Swayze, Charlie Sheen and other notable
80’s actors, correct?

Sarah:
That is correct. I didn’t even know Swayze and Sheen were in it.

A:
Then I can tell you that the new version is relatively faithful to the
original. Most of the character names are exactly the same…

S:
What about the story? I know the original version had the Russians as the
invading enemy and the new one changed it to North Korea.

A:
That’s one of the two big differences for sure. The two differences are that
A.) they’ve moved the setting from Colorado to Spokane, Washington, and B.)
they’ve changed the villains from the Russians to the North Koreans.

Now, when they originally
filmed the movie in 2009 the bad guys were actually the Chinese…

Chris Hemsworth headlines the cast of young up-and-comers in the remake of 1984's Red Dawn. Ironically, he filmed this in 2009 before hitting it big in 2011's Thor.

Synopsis: A magical and secret group called The Guardians of Childhood - comprised of Santa Claus (Baldwin), the Easter Bunny (Jackman), the Tooth Fairy (Fisher) and the Sandman - protect the hopes and dreams of children worldwide. Through their classic duties (i.e. delivering Christmas gifts, Easter eggs, leaving gifts for lost teeth) they must maintain children's belief in them in order to protect them. But when an ancient evil named Pitch (Law) rises from the darkness and threatens the Guardians' very existence, they must reach out to the lonely and misunderstood Jack Frost (Pine) to join them in their cause.

REVIEW

Andrew: Hello readers! Sarah and I were able
to catch an advance showing of this holiday season’s newest animated film,
Dreamworks’ Rise of the Guardians, based on William Joyce’s “The Guardians
of Childhood” book series. In a neat spin on some classic childhood characters,
the film’s protagonists – The Guardians, if you will – are Santa Claus, the Easter
Bunny, the Tooth Fairy, the Sandman and their newest member, Jack Frost.

Sarah: And here they’re all called something
different: Santa Claus is just called North, the Easter Bunny is E. Astor
Bunnymund, the Tooth Fairy is simply Tooth and the Sandman is called Sandy.

A: Correct. And what the Guardians do,
essentially, is protect children’s wishes, hopes, dreams, etc. and try their
best to bring joy to kids around the world. They strive to continually ensure that children "believe" in them, because it's only through strong belief do they truly exist, and only when they exist can they defend the children against evil forces that may threaten them, particularly The Boogeyman…

North (a.k.a. Santa Claus) explains to Jack Frost that every light on their globe is a child who believes in the Guardians' existence, while Tooth, Sandy and Bunnymund watch from the side. It's really a neat idea that's executed quite well.

Rating: PG-13 for sequences of violence including disturbing images, some sensuality and partial nudity

Run Time: 1 hour, 55 minutes

Synopsis: Bella (Stewart) has just been turned into a vampire by her husband, Edward (Pattinson), following the complicated birth of their daughter, Renesmee. While enjoying the vampire life and marriage at first, a threat to their family rises after the Volturi are mistakenly told Bella and Edward's daughter is an illegal vampire child. Knowing a showdown is looming, the Cullen clan scours the globe trying to recruit as many friends as they can to back up their claim that Renesmee is no threat to the Volturi...but will it be enough to avoid a death sentence?

REVIEW

Andrew: Hello readers! Last night Sarah and I
braved the throngs of teenage girls and caught a showing of the fifth and final
entry in The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part Two. Sarah, this is
more your cup of tea, so why don’t you quickly break this one down for us?

Sarah: Well as you said this is the fifth
movie in the series, having split the fourth and final book in the series into
two films (as the trend seems to be nowadays). So picking up right where the
last film left off, we see Kristen Stewart’s Bella as a vampire now as she is
discovering her new strengths and abilities. The past four movies we’ve really
seen Bella as a bumbling, clumsy teenager who is super-awkward and now we see
her come into her own, like this was what she was always meant to be.

Edward
(Robert Pattinson) and Bella also have a newborn daughter, Renesmee, who is
alive and well but is growing at an alarming rate and because no one has ever
had experience dealing with a half-human, half-vampire hybrid no one knows if
she’ll keep growing this fast, if she’ll age too quickly, will grow old and die
in a short period of time, etc. And maybe more importantly the Volturi, the
vampire police, are informed of Renesmee’s existence and are lead to believe
she’s an Immortal Child, which is a child that has been bitten and turned,
which is illegal. That’s not the case with Renesmee, so the Cullen clan goes
around the world trying to scrounge up “witnesses” to testify to the Volturi
that she isn’t an Immortal Child. That’s about the first three-quarters of the
film.

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Andrew: Hello readers! Our weekly preview is back
after a one-week hiatus, and while it's not going to be a particularly long
preview, there are definitely some talking points here for us to touch on.
Sarah, there are only two wide releases for this weekend - the final installment
of the hugely popular Twilight series, The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn - Part 2,
and Steven Spielberg’s Abraham Lincoln biopic, Lincoln. We'll also
briefly touch on a smaller film we've been waiting for that has finally hit our
neck of the woods, The Sessions, starring John Hawkes and Helen Hunt.

So let's start this
off with the new Twilight movie, shall we? Sarah, can you summarize what the
last film is about? Where does it pick up from where the last one left off?

Sarah:Well in the first part of Breaking Dawn, we finally
get to see Kristen Stewart’s Bella and Robert Pattinson’s Edward tie the knot
and the final breakdown of Taylor Lautner’s Jacob as he realizes that that
Bella will never be his. While Bella and Edward are on their honeymoon, she
makes the grave discovery that she is somehow pregnant...and apparently a
couple of months along. This is what happens when you get are impregnated by a
vampire, people!. The rest of the story follows Bella on her very painful
pregnancy as the baby grows at an accelerated rate and basically sucks the life
out of her. The Cullens quickly realize that the only way she is ever going to
survive the birth is if she is turned to a vampire at the right moment. The
movie ends with Jacob imprinting on the Edward/Bella baby and Bella opening her
blood red eyes.

I have to say I am
excited to see this one; a little bit because I am ready for it to be over, a
little bit because I want to see some vampires kicking butt. I am hoping to see
Michael Sheen more in this one, because he plays such a good vampire as the
head of the vampire police, the Volturi. It is one of the most anticipated
movies of the holiday season, so I will be interested to see if it lives up to
the hype.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Andrew: Hello readers! Sorry that we've been a little quiet the past
few days, been a little busy with the day-jobs. We wanted to break that silence
with a new Six-Pack, and it dawned on us today that the year 2012 is going to
be OVER in just 7 weeks, but there are still a LOT of movies that will be
coming out between now and then that we're very excited to see! So we put the
two together, and now, for you reading enjoyment, A Six-Pack Of Movies We're Still
Looking Forward To In 2012!

1.)
HYDE PARK ON HUDSON (December 7th)

Sarah: I'm
going to do this by date and the first movie that I am going to start with is Hyde
Park on Hudson. This movie is about the love affair between Franklin
Roosevelt and his distant cousin, Margaret Suckley. The story centers around a
weekend spent in upstate New York when the King and Queen of England came to
visit. Starring Bill Murray as FDR, Laura Linney as Margaret, along with Olivia
Williams, Olivia Colman and Samuel West, this is one that I have been really
looking forward to ever since I saw the first trailer for it. I love period
piece movies so this, of course, was right up my alley. We haven't really had a
lot of movies where FDR has been the star so it will be interesting to see a
different side of a famous President. I am excited to see how Linney and Murray
play off each other. The one concern that I have it that it could be a bit of a
snoozer, but I'm really hoping that's not the case!

Saturday, November 10, 2012

Rating:
PG-13 for an intense scene of war violence, some images of carnage and brief
strong language

Run Time:
2 hours, 29 minutes

Synopsis:
During what would be the final few months of his life, President Abraham
Lincoln (Day-Lewis) struggles with the politics and ethics of trying to end the
Civil War and get the 13th Amendment to the Constitution passed
while avoiding the scenario of getting one result at the expense of the other.

REVIEW

Andrew:
We’re posting this a little late, but Sarah and I were able to catch an advance
screening of Steven Spielberg’s latest film, Lincoln, his long-awaited
biopic of Honest Abe. It has a cavalcade of stars, headlined by two-time
Academy Award-winer Daniel Day-Lewis (There Will Be Blood) in the title
role, along with supporting turns by Sally Field (The Amazing Spider-Man),
Tommy Lee Jones (Hope Springs), Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Looper) and a whole lot
of other actors.

Sarah:
Just about anyone you can think of was in this movie.

A: Pretty
much! Obviously it’s a biographical film of Abraham Lincoln, but it only the
last few months of his life, particularly during the final weeks prior to the
House of Representatives voting to approve the 13th Amendment. It’s
a very small but important part of his life and his fight to end slavery.

So Sarah, while this was a movie that was in gestation for
quite some time (Spielberg has been trying to get this movie made for years
with Liam Neeson attached at one point to star as Lincoln), we haven’t been
totally jazzed to see it. A lot of that had to do with the fact that we weren’t
enamored with War Horse. We’re
probably in the minority about this, but when we saw the trailer for Lincoln,
it gave us flashbacks to War Horse didn’t it?

Do not be fooled by the trailer for Lincoln. Most of the movie takes place in a room like this or in the House of Republicans' chambers.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Andrew: So far during our 7 Days of 007
week, Sarah and I have been able to watch and review a James Bond movie every
night, but tonight Sarah had to work late, so we’re not going to be able to
review one tonight. Instead, I felt like this would be a good chance to share
exactly why I love this series so much. I thought about it all day, and these
are the Five Reasons Why I love the James Bond Series.

When I was a kid I almost felt like Desmond Llewelyn's Q wasanother grandfather to me. That's how often I watched thesefilms.

1.) The Gadgets – Let’s be
honest, there isn’t a single guy out there who has seen any of the Bond movies
who WASN’T jealous of all the cool gadgets MI6’s Q Branch creates. Off the top
of my head I can think of a watch with a laser cutter (GoldenEye), a jetpack (Thunderball),
a briefcase with hidden guns and knife (From Russia With Love), the Aston
Martin DB5 (Goldfinger), a magnetic
watch (Live and Let Die) and that’s only the tip of the iceberg. Bond
used Q’s gadgets to get out of jams, to gain information…pretty much anything
you can think of (yes, including undressing women!) Q Branch was absent from
Daniel Craig’s first two Bond films, but Skyfall sees the character resurrected
by Ben Whishaw in a nice modern take on Major Boothroyd. I’m excited to see
what inventions he comes up with for 007 in future installments.

2.) The Girls – Oh c’mon, of
course I couldn't leave out the Bond girls. I am a red-blooded male after all. But it’s not just the
attractiveness of the Bond girls, it is how they increasingly became stronger
female characters as the series progressed. The series has come a long way
since Honey Rider’s famous introduction; from Bond girls like Honey and Tatiana
from From
Russia With Love who were almost nothing more than pretty faces, to
Grace Jones’ May Day, Famke Janssen’s Xenia Onatopp and Halle Berry’s Jinx
being strong soldiers/spies on par with 007. Craig’s films have been a mixed
bag in this regard with Vesper Lynd being a great one, Quantum of Solace’s being
absolutely forgettable, and Skyfall has one hit (Naomie Harris’
Eve) and one miss (Berenice Marloh’s Severine).